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02:15
@ACuriousMind this is what category theory tries to "make precise", right? i'm still just at the tip of the iceberg... so it's not just saying the same thing with different jargon, there's somehow more information contained? you're saying that there are specific differences for each case people talk about things like "the form of the equation being preserved"; it seems like category theory is the overall connection/generalisation though?
 
1 hour later…
03:24
@qwerty You might like to check out the Babylonian Astronomical Diaries.
May 25, 2023 at 10:58, by PM 2Ring
As I said in https://astronomy.stackexchange.com/a/47584/16685 The Babylonians made ~7 centuries of daily astronomical observations from around 700 BC. That data was the basis of the astronomical tables of Hipparchus, which Ptolemy used in creating the formulae of celestial motions in the Almagest. There's more information about these diaries on https://www.livius.org/articles/concept/astronomical-diaries/
Oct 27, 2022 at 13:04, by PM 2Ring
I have to admire the people who are working on translating the Babylonian Astronomical Diaries. It's awesome that we have that data, but it's not exactly riveting reading material. ;)
I think it is just important; not that it is riveting or anything. It is that we want to make sure that there wasn't some sudden break in our astronomical past when some insanity happened.
It will also feel amazing when we run out simulations backwards and see that the predicted observations agree with what the diaries show
The Diaries also contain weather observations. They also mention crop yields, and important political & military events. That's because they wanted to accumulate data so they could search for astrological patterns.
also makes it clear that we have good translations with all the numbers all correct and all
Well, our earliest ephemerides came from that data, via Ptolemy. And our current ephemerides are certainly consistent with our older ephemerides. So, really, we've been using that data all along. Especially the stuff related to the solar & lunar cycles.
Sure, that old data isn't very high precision. But it gives us valuable info on the slowing of the Earth's rotation, especially the solar eclipse records, from Babylon & elsewhere.
Also eclipse records from various cultures help us to synchronise the historical records of those cultures.
The smallest irregularities in the Earth's rotation are essentially unpredictable: they amount to predicting the "weather" in the mantle. So any ancient data relating to the Earth's rotation is pretty important. eclipsewise.com/help/uncertainty.html
Even with all our modern technology, terrestrial & space-based observations, and massive computing power, we still can't predict Delta T to high precision very far into the future. Which is why there's no fixed schedule for leap seconds. Of course, there are large predictable components, but the small components are large enough to screw things up. ;)
03:54
@PM2Ring thanks for the links :) I'm not really super into astro/observation stuff, but still cool how much the ancients knew and did
7 centuries of daily observations is really remarkable
you need a lot of political/cultural stability for that
@qwerty The livius.org link isn't huge, and it's a fun read. The Diaries themselves are pretty boring, but kinda hypnotic. ;)
@qwerty actually, the rate at which things change is, other than a function of policies encouraging or discouraging change, also a function of how many people there were, and the past didn't feed enough people for change to happen so often. It is also the case that the political structure can divest power and make for stability; people are ok with having the same powerless figurehead if they can effect political change elsewhere. Hence the millennium run of the Crysanthemum throne
@qwerty Yep. And motivation. They weren't just doing it for idle curiosity. There was some practical motivation to get good solar & lunar data, for calendar construction, and predicting Moon phases & eclipses. But the main motivation was astrology.
That's a bit embarrassing for many modern astronomers. :) OTOH, the separation of astronomy & astrology is only relatively recent. Kepler & Newton both believed in astrology, but Halley thought it was nonsense. Cassini got into astronomy because of astrology...
@naturallyInconsistent interesting! I've never considered the population size as the underlying variable. apparently the reason why sci fi /time travel is a relatively new cultural idea is that because in the past, the rate of change was so slow
@PM2Ring interesting how the nomenclature never got "reclaimed" as well, I guess because astrology remains a popular cultural pasttime (somewhat disappointingly). even though it's just star-study, whereas -nomy implies the more boring "naming of".
04:10
There are some old stories of people going to other realms where time passes at a different rate, though. So when they return to our realm many years have passed, even though they were in the other realm for a few days. Or vice versa.
@qwerty Right. Astronomy is "just the facts", with no interpretation. But I suppose we've bypassed the need to reclaim the nomenclature, since we now have more specific terms like astrophysics, and orbital mechanics.
true
When Brian May started his degree, his field was just known as astronomy. When he finally returned to uni, it had become astrophysics.
He discovered evidence in the zodiacal dust that the Solar System is moving through an interstellar dust cloud. But that info didn't get published for a few decades because Bri was busy being a rock star. Other observers discovered that dust & published papers abour it in the mean time.
That dust is pretty low density, and our local dust dominates it in the inner system. But out past Uranus or so, the interstellar dust becomes significant.
@qwerty im not sure that is the case. one first needs a complicated conception of time in order to start playing more than just "time passes differently" as different constants or some such. That's a pretty modern phenomenon and it is difficult to even disentangle which contributed what
04:27
Fair point. Stories involving different time rates are found in various cultures. But stories of traveling to the past or future (and returning to the present) seem to be a fairly modern concept.
04:38
@PM2Ring "zodiacal dust"! that's new to me
@naturallyInconsistent mhmm, it was just one thing I read. but "I wonder what it would be like if I could visit Camelot/Queen Elizabeth I" etc seem like such basic, even child-like, as a imaginative scenario that is seriously strange to the modern sensibility that it is in fact such a recent idea
@qwerty There's a lot of it, but it's not easy to see. You need good eyes, no light pollution, and no visible Moon. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zodiacal_light
Asteroid sizes roughly follow a power law, so there's a lot of really teeny ones. astronomy.stackexchange.com/a/49425/16685 I like to call the really small ones dusteroids. ;)
@PM2Ring may I ask what's your physics/professional background? is astro your specialisation?
I'm just an enthusiastic amateur. :)
any areas in particular? :)
One of my high school science yeachers was a former president of the Royal Astronomical Society ras.ac.uk He was also a co-author of our science text book. He worked in industrial chemistry before immigrating and becoming a textbook author & teacher.
@qwerty I like celestial mechanics. I'm also intrigued by stellar nuclear processes, but I don't have the skills to understand it deeply.
I'm interested in cosmology, too. I'm not motivated enough to study it deeply, but I like to know about it at a bit deeper than a pop-sci level.
04:58
did you do undergrad physics?
No, I'm self-taught.
7
if you were in fact motivated to learn deeply, there's plenty of textbooks/resources you could follow
Oh, I've read (and worked through) lots of good textbooks. Before the internet, I always had access to good libraries. But I'm getting too old to learn new stuff. I can learn stuff that connects to stuff I already know, but it's really hard to retain new stuff.
@PM2Ring That's hella impressive
Thanks
05:06
Most of my time is spent reading textbooks too, but I usually rely on my curriculum to pick them
I guess you look for suggestions then?
These days, I mostly just read stuff from arXiv on topics that catch my interest. Mostly mathematics, rather than physics.
05:35
@PM2Ring I really feel discouraged when I can't write down the proper solution of exercises/problems in the textbook. Would you advise me on this? (PS: Even after reading the textbook)
05:53
@LuckyChouhan Sorry, I don't know you (or your knowledge level) well enough to give you much practical advice. But one thing that I found helpful is to work methodically through a textbook. Do not skip over the easy exercises at the start. They help you "warm up" for the later more complicated exercises. And they introduce you to the way the author structures their exercises.
A good author structures their exercises so that you gradually gain the skills you need to do those exercises. Sadly, not all textbook authors work like that, and you get the feeling that they just threw a random bunches of exercises together as an afterthought...
06:10
@SirCumference seconded
06:49
@qwerty Changes used to be so slow that people thought that antiquity was as advanced / primitive as they lived. When there is no visible sign of progress, people thought that it didn't exist, and that Ramsees lived in a world similar to Elizabeth, just that politics changed.
@qwerty thirded
it's funny because some things we might now think of as modern are in fact kinda ancient too. I went into a deeeeep rabbit hole about the history of toy dogs and dog genetics research and ended up digging up like ming(?iirc or even earlier) ancient Chinese texts about little dogs imported from the Roman Empire all the way to China(!!!). I'm a heritage Chinese language speaker (but poorly and not mandarin) and illiterate so that was a SLOG to try to read and translate for myself but soooo fun
@qwerty oooo~
It is already pretty difficult to present physics in mandarin; if they want meow meow to do it in Hokkein, miao miao would dieeee
basically there were little white fluffy dogs from Malta aka Maltese (don't let the kennel clubs tell you it's not well defined yada yada... I mean aka in phenotype sense)
recorded by Aristotle and others in ancient Rome as well
the context was basically people bashing some nationality or group or other for being effeminate for taking little handbag dogs to the gym
like REAL WARRIORS don't carry little dogs to the gym
very funny... I'll dig a link up later
lol
insecure men being insecure for millennia
07:05
I find the idea of an ancient Roman Paris Hilton with a handbag dog somehow extremely amusing
hahahahhahhaha
Roman male Paris Hilton?
Athenaeus, in his voluminous early 3rd century CE Deipnosophistae (12:518–519), states that it was a characteristic of the Sicilian Sybarites, notorious for the extreme punctiliousness of their refined tastes, to delight in the company of owl-faced jester-dwarfs and Melite lap-dogs (rather than in their fellow human beings), with the latter accompanying them even when they went to exercise in the gymnasia.[n]
2
wiki had it
this is from a Victorian era book. The Emperor of the Turkoman country visited the Honan Emperor in 609 and accompanied the Emperor Yang Ti on an expedition to Korea. He married a Chinese princess on his return. His successor sent an envoy with two dogs, one male and one female, to the Emperor Kou Tzu (6 18-629). Their height was about 6 tsun (inches), and their length i ch'ih (foot) and a little.* These dogs were of great intelligence.
2
Note that we dont even have to go that far. King Louis XIV made it fashionable for noblemen to wear lace and keep coming to his parties. IIRC he was also the one who wrote advice to his son that such parties are just keeping up appearances, and that the state affairs still had to be done properly; the point is to infect the rest of the courts with one-uppance and waste their finances and time.
07:19
They could lead horses by the reins, and each was trained to light its master's path at night by carrying a torch in its mouth. These dogs were born in the Fu Lin (拂菻 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…) country."
@PM2Ring For some reason I thought you worked in academia. I'm impressed. Of course, getting a formal education is not the only way to gather knowledge in a field, but self-teaching is tenfold as difficult. You did great
@naturallyInconsistent is physics easier in English for you?
@Mr.Feynman by farrrrrr
Which makes me ask the following question to the chat: what comes more natural to you when doing physics? Your native language or English (if English is your native language reply "HONK")? For me it's about the same level, but after QFT I need to borrow many English words
@PM2Ring i am self taught too
og citation for the dog spam is [ T'ung K'ao, by Ma Tuan Lin (lived about A.D. 960, in Sung Dynasty)en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wenxian_Tongkao , and T'ung Tien by Tu Yo (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tongdian , Tongdian 通典 ). also Schafer has alt translation p77., suggests they are Roman dogs i.e. Maltese.
/end dogspam
@Mr.Feynman HONK
07:32
Yes
Sorry, I can't honk back
Woof?
meow?
(this chat is a menagerie)
@qwerty there are different views on this, but to me the primary use of category theory is not that it contains more information but that it gives me a unifying language to talk about the similarities and differences between different fields with different objects and different notions of what a "good" map between the objects of study is
@qwerty if I didn't have sore throat I would try to go for a crow's call
And I would fail nonetheless
Its focus on the morphisms as just as relevant as if not more than the objects pulls into focus that often we are less interested in the objects in isolation but the relationships between them
@Mr.Feynman English, but that's because it has been the primary language of my study and work for over a decade. At this point German is just what I speak with most of my friends :P
@Mr.Feynman H O N K ~
07:49
@Mr.Feynman English
@ACuriousMind I relate a lot to this; especially over the last 2 years, speaking of physics in Italian started feeling like translation :P
"Should I keep this word in English or adapt it?"
@naturallyInconsistent Is English your native language?!?!
I thought you were Asian (although I can't pinpoint where :P)
08:07
@Mr.Feynman im actually more fluent and comfortable in mandarin but I cannot fully work in that language since miao miao only knows physics in English
@Mr.Feynman The vast majority of English speakers are Indian, followed by Chinese, if myow understanding of the demographics is correct, lol
Annoyed by universities who delete a professor's page with all their papers when they move out
08:31
@naturallyInconsistent In India English is a native language in India. Is it in China?
@Slereah a bit bitchy
@Mr.Feynman Maybe in the Shangai Municipality
08:58
@Mr.Feynman there are also places such a singapore, which have english as the lingua franca
@Mr.Feynman It is not. But never underestimate the irrationality of an entire peoples. For example, the Korean pre-university examinations feature an English exam so difficult that it will shock Brits
@Mr.Feynman are you sick? get well soon :)
@qwerty Thanks :)
@naturallyInconsistent Oh, sure. I'm not talking about the English level. It was more about the label of native vs non-native
@Mr.Feynman sure, that wont be at the native level, but look at how miao miao wrote that; it was English speakers only miahahahaha. Or better, writers. One can write without being able to pronounce.
@Mr.Feynman gws too~~
@naturallyInconsistent What about people in Alabama though
They can't write or pronounce it
09:09
@ACuriousMind hm, but you were saying that "preserving the form of an equation" or "preserve the form of Hamilton's equations" isn't a precise statement, whereas something like a "symplectomorphism, leaving the symplectic form of phase space invariant" is. the definition of a morphism you were happy with was "a function that preserves some kind of structure", which to me seems kind of the same level of vagueness until you specific the category and the morphism?
Is category helpful rly
a "morphism" can be anything as long as it can be composed
@Slereah boxes
A better way to consider morphism as "preserving structure" is model theory
4
A: mathematical logic: definition of a homomorphism, isomorphism and related notions

Alex KruckmanYou're right that these definitions are confusing. Is it possible that they've been translated from another language? It seems to me that Definition 1 is defining what I would call an embedding (though missing the condition of reflecting relations - unless that's contained in Definition 2). Defin...

$$h(f^A(a_1,\dots,a_n)) = f^B(h(a_1),\dots,h(a_n))$$
@Slereah You might be amused that, one fine day, a friend of mine wanted meow meow to deal with his smug Alabaman uncle. That was a quick conversation; there wasn't much that people can recognise as a nice recent impression of Alabama.
De facto that is how morphisms work on a practical level
09:14
@qwerty The issue is that, once pressed for it, ACM can always supply the necessary ingredients to make the statements precise. That is not true for how we physicists usually put it.
for instance a morphism in vector spaces with the constant $0$ and the functions $+, \cdot$ is a function $f : V \to W$ such that $f(0_V) = 0_W$, $f(+(v_1, v_2)) = +(f(v_1), f(v_2))$ and $f(\cdot(x, v)) = \cdot(x, f(v))$
For symplectic spaces it's the same but you also have to preserve the function $\omega$
in all formulas
@naturallyInconsistent I think we're having some issue getting through to each other. I think that a non-native speaker can speak and write better than a native, no doubts about that. I was really just discussing the political side of it, i.e. the official language of the place where one was born :P
And now: linear response theory!
@qwerty The Greeks were very impressed by it and also a bit naive
Some would say that the data stretched back as far as a million years
Which I assume was some Sumerian priest messing with them
@qwerty Well, when you say what the morphisms in a specific category are, you don't wave your hands and say "they preserve some structure I guess" but you make a formal definition like the one for symplectomorphisms
I think you can make the "it preserves structures" argument rigorous in category theory but you'd probably have to mess with the category's internal logic or something :p
09:31
Category theory is not the thing that makes the notion of preserving structure precise - what you need for that is just the proper mathematical formulation of a subject instead of the handwaving of physicists :P
Model theory seems pretty clear to do it rly
simple enough
and that's pretty much how people mean it when they do it in practice
are higher dimensional branes fixed hypersurfaces or are they quantum objects whose state has to be path integrated
people say that these branes r similar to strings, so r these branes quantum objects which r dynamical?
but it also says that branes give the boundary conditions for the string propagation. this gives the vibes that the brane is just a fixed hypersurface
By "branes" do you mean D-branes specifically
yes
are these dynamical quantum objects like strings or just fixed hypersurfaces
ooh wiki says they can scatter off each other
so they're dynamical and quantum
so they're like strings, except higher dimensional and they also give the boundary conditions for string propagation
09:47
@Mr.Feynman miao miao can always just quibble~
@Mr.Feynman by what method? Kubo?
@Slereah I'll take your word for it, the "internal logic" part of categories always remained somewhat opaque to me :P
Maclane's book on the topic is a pretty good introduction :
10:03
I wonder if any of the predictions of babylonian astrologers were true just by sheer correlation
The sky's appearance is strongly dependent on the time of the year, many events are also dependent on the time of the year
also the "astrology" included the weather back then which is also probably a good predictor of things?
do we path integrate over D brane propagation like we do over string propagation
such that, in the worldvolume diagram, the boundary of the open string stays on the D- brane
is this the correct understanding of dynamical d brane
10:20
@qwerty miao miao was cut off by work and couldn't finish the sentence in time to piece them together, so sorry for 2nd ping: The situation is the same as maths at the professorial level; there must be use of some estoeric or vague language, but the crucial difference is that a mathematician can always, upon pressed, produce the rigorous version. It is just an exercise. It is not "Just learn category theory.".
what can we say about whether dark matter is scientific or just a way to save general relativity from falsification
the cosmological constant wouldn't be seen as a way to save general relativity. what makes dark matter different
2
Q: Why is "dark matter" theory accepted? Why wasn't general relativity rejected?

peter petermennDark matter was made up to account for unexplained effects such as gravitational lensing, the speed of expansion of the universe, or the rate of rotation of certain galaxies. However, as Feynman famously stated (see e.g. wikiquote), If it disagrees with experiment it is wrong. In that simple...

10:39
@RyderRude What does "scientific" mean
10:53
@JohnRennie thanks
@JohnRennie this means dark matter is a successful model
@Slereah as in, one should aim to out more predictions out from fewer assumptions
Well it works and so far has yet to be disproved.
has it made predictions?
Though it would be nice to detect dark matter particles directly.
@naturallyInconsistent I'll be honest man. I don't understand a thing :P
why must dark matter arise from particles when cosmological constant doesn't need to arise from particles @JohnRennie
11:02
The difference is the way the two scale as the universe expands.
maybe because dark matter requires a stress energy tensor
@JohnRennie oh
so we need matter in our model to fit the data
The density of dark matter scales as 1/a³ i.e. the same as regular matter
@JohnRennie oh
i think it's a good hypothesis. A well motivated one
The density of dark energy/cosmological constant is a constant and does not depend on a at all. The different scaling is why dark matter slows the expansion and dark energy accelerates it.
The term "dark matter" really just means "something with an energy density that scales as 1/a³"
And as far as we know only matter scales that way. Radiation scales as 1/a⁴.
@naturallyInconsistent Miao Miao~~ should write physics textbook in mandarin :P
11:05
so we are able to fit the observations when input this energy density in the equations
Yes, though that's not the achievement that it sounds like since the density of dark matter is an almost free variable.
thanks
@JohnRennie oh
yeah.. if we are allowed to fine tune the energy density, we could fit any observation we want
but dark matter doesn't require fine tuning. 1/a3 is a simple hypothesis
That is, in galaxies we can adjust the function giving the dark matter density as a function of distance from the centre of the galaxy.
@RyderRude we can see the motion of dark matter via gravitational lensing astronomy
@JohnRennie so we do finite tune it a bit
@Slereah oh
11:09
The 1/a³ dependence is the average density on a large scale i.e. a scale greater than the size of galaxy clusters.
@JohnRennie is this function arrived at by some natural assumptions that any kind of matter would obey, or is this function freely fine tuned
There are three "observations" of dark matter:
- galaxy rotation curves
- galaxy cluster dynamics
- gravitational microlensing
@RyderRude I think it comes from modelling the WMAP data.
I'm not at my PC so I can't easily get a link to the WMAP papers.
@JohnRennie but then we are freely fine tuning it to observation. is this model even falsifiable?
@JohnRennie does this model predict any of these observations or is it fine tuned to all of these
But I imagine a quick Google would find them. They are on the arxiv.
@Mr.Feynman keep them as they are. You may know "eigenvalues and eigenvector" here they word "eigen" is German, and whenever we want to discuss about it, we don't translate it in our mother tongue or other languages as we don't translate names so, it won't make sense to translate those words remember "Use Alphabets to ask questions about Dinosaur"
11:13
@JohnRennie i will check it out..
would you say that dark matter is falsifiable? as in, what could it not model? @JohnRennie @Slereah
could it model any reasonable observations
fine tuning seems to suggest it
Well if matching the observed galaxy rotation curves required a physically improbable dark matter distribution that would be strong evidence against it.
After all dark matter experiences the same gravitational fields as regular matter and has to respond in the same way.
that makes sense. So the distribution is not completely freely tunable
It's tunable within limits ...
the hypothesis that it is matter constrains the distribution
@LuckyChouhan never. That's wayyyy too time consuming
11:17
Yes
@Mr.Feynman it's linear response. It aint the horrible stuff yet!
let's get to predictions. Slereah said we can test some of its predictions. So it is not entirely about just fitting observations
i think predictions are another test of a hypothesis, other than falsifiability
@Slereah so the model predicts how dark matter is supposed to move, and we have verified that?
No, that's the equation of state of dark matter, which is independent of GR :p
We can just see that there's something
@naturallyInconsistent so you teach in mandarin and use physics' names as they're in books? Just asking because this is what most of the people do (and makes sense), but here in India teachers don't teach in Hindi even when all students know Hindi :(
oh. so no predictions that have been verified other than that it seems to be matter there @Slereah
it makes sense. Predictions are too much to ask for from a hypothesis like this
11:21
Sounds like a pretty good verification to me
@naturallyInconsistent Ok, yes, it is indeed called "Kubo formula". Anyways, it's the notes, not the topic
@Slereah lol
@LuckyChouhan Unfortunate example: in Italian we call them "autovettori"
in particle physics, we keep discovering new particles. So i think new matter is an okay hypothesis
@LuckyChouhan Well, if the lecture is in mandarin, then the name would be using the translated, and then in brackets, the original names.
11:22
where "auto" is the translation of "eigen"
*adaptation
Not translation
@Mr.Feynman yeah, Kubo is magic.
@Slereah is this an independent equation from say, the geodesic equation generalised to fluids
If you don't know what an equation of state is I think you should probably not worry about dark matter for now
oh
i was just wondering whether or not it is scientific
but it seems like a good hypothesis, going by this conversation
thanks @JohnRennie @Slereah
@Mr.Feynman My bad :( so Italians study math and physics in Italian? Here in India, we also have Hindi (and english) medium in school, where we can find science books written in Hindi with Hindi names, but those names feel so weird and somehow for me their original English names make sense, btw what is your term for "Orthogonal Projection"?
@naturallyInconsistent have you heard the name of Richard Bellman?
11:28
If you're worried about dark matter re. the scientific method that is the kind of topic Lakatos talks about
Not specifically that one but it is about auxilliary hypothesis
@LuckyChouhan no, but dynamic programming was a big thing way back
oh
does he make any comments on dark matter? If not, do u think dark matter passes the criteria he specifies? @Slereah
ok im out to have fun yet again miahahaha bye
Lakatos is from the 60's
He wasn't super informed about dark matter
@naturallyInconsistent yeah, it is still fancy term, but we all do programming problems using it without realizing we're using the concept of dynamic programming.
11:30
makes sense
His point is that no theory by itself is scientific or unscientific in that sense
It is that it's the evolution of the research programme is
so he assigns scientific-ness not to specific theories, but to developments of theories over time
i guess that could be a viewpoint
In a purely Popperian sense, those theories are scientific, but so are any theory that works from ad hoc hypothesis
But you can call ad hoc basically anything
yes. The definition of ad hoc ultimately just comes down to vibes
Lakatos' point is that some scientific programmes are productive while others are degenerate
And he would consider only the productive ones to be scientific, although that doesn't mean they're wrong or right
11:35
what is the definition of productive and degenerate that he uses
In that sense dark matter is productive since it can lead to new predictions
Productivz auxilliary hypothesis allow for new predictions, while degenerate ones do not
Of course this isn't necessarily bad. Sometimes you do need an extra hypothesis even if it's not productive
But a programme that is only kept afloat from piling more and more degenerate ad hoc hypothesis is considered suspect
so Lakatos values predictions. on the surface, i cant appreciate his criterion, because it doesn't seem too well defined to me. But he probably makes it well defined in his book
i think it needs to used in conjunction with falsifiability
Course, although as Lakatos goes over for a while, falsifiability is not unproblematic
oh
falsifiability is not too well defined either
i usually use falsifiability and predictability in conjunction
in this discussion, I asked "what could dark matter not model". This is related to falsifiability
Point is, dark matter's fine and we're not flush with alternatives
People are mostly having knee jerk reactions due to the fact that we can't see it
11:42
that's great news. I think GR is extremely beautiful. I would've hated if dark matter was a technique to save GR's wrong predictions
so I wanted to rule that out
@Slereah neutrinos can't be seen either. my problem was more with "scientific-ness" of it
Well we didn't detect a neutrino for 30 years after their prediction
yes
i am just glad that GR is likely exactly true at macroscopic scales
11:57
@Mr.Feynman how disrespectful to Mr Eigen
In french we say "propre" instead of eigen
We're not gonna let the krauts tell us how to speak
Vecteur propre, valeur propre, etc
I saw The Exorcist. it had a scary scene where she is crawling upside down
But it is slow and anti-climatic in the end. I would give it 7/10. But it is a "realistic" depiction of Exorcism compared to modern horror movies
But the characters r too stupid. the girl is able to make things levitate and the characters still wonder if she is just mentally ill
12:25
@LuckyChouhan Yes. I think most Europeans do, before getting to more advanced stuff
@ACuriousMind I guess he was less popular than Sir Gauge
@Slereah at least that's a proper (pun not intended) translation. "autovettore" means "self-vector" literally
12:42
@Mr.Feynman that's what the German word means, too!
one fun thing is that particle names in Japanese are not loan words
[although they are calques]
電子, small lightning, 陽子, small positive, 中性子, small neutral, 光子, small light
although that's mostly just for the big ones
more obscure particles are just loans
Ironically not even naming the pion after Yukawa
13:23
@ACuriousMind Wait doesn't it mean "proper"?
Ah, wait, maybe it's the other nuance of "proper"
@Slereah The process of combining kanji to create words that do not have a Japanese version is a complex task
Apparently, even if Japanese borrowed kanji from Old Chinese, since they were closer to West, they were the first to introduce some words as a combination of already existing kanji; thereafter, China borrowed these words :P
one thing that surprised me a little is that Japanese for glass is a loanword from dutch because they had not discovered it apparently
I guess making glass is less obvious than you'd think
The way they are formed is cute, though. For example. Take the very first kanji you wrote, 電. Semantically, this is related to electric stuff (lightning). If you combine it with 話 (speak), you get 電話 (phone) $\sim$ talking via electricity
the electrophone
I even learned recently that they didn't have words for consciousness so they had to combine Kanji to create new ones. Anyhow, as of today they tend to just take loan words and write them in katakana, mostly
Incidentally, 電話 was one of the words that China later borrowed (but it's written a little bit differently now due to simplified Chinese)
Final fun fact before disappearing: if you instead you combine it with 気 (spirit), you get 電気 which is electricity.
 
1 hour later…
14:32
@Mr.Feynman yes, it's the sense of "proper time" (German sometimes Eigenzeit) and "property" - the vectors are "owned by the operator"
And my dumbass hoped polite vectors were a thing in Germany
@Mr.Feynman a computer is an "electric brain" in Chinese, which I always thought was unrelated to anything in English, but I was watching some American/British documentary clips/adverts archived from the 1950s(60s?) which referred to computers as "electric brains" (or something very close, I forget) and I was completely shocked that perhaps it may have been a direct translation
In French it is an ordinateur, the one who puts things in order
which is originally some ecclesiastical term
^the computer
Basically a bureaucrat sort of position
14:49
@qwerty interesting that for that word, Japanese use コンピューター (konpyūtā) instead
@Mr.Feynman classic. not too surprising, in e.g. hong kong you will get lots of transliterations(? is that the right word) alongside translations as well
it is the word yes
 
3 hours later…
17:46
Wouldn't having boundary terms on the einstien field equations affect the geodesic equation?
why would it
18:33
Hi, one question. We say that the BZ is the wigner seitz cell in resciprocal space. When constructing it, we consider some origin in the reciprocal lattice and, while respecting the Brillouin condition we define the first BZ, which encloses this reciprocal lattice point.
Then I asked my professor if the number of $\vec k$ values coincides with the nr. of lattice point inside the BZ and he said yes. E.g if one were to consider the simple case of the reciprocal lattice of a simple cubic lattice, the BZ would be a cube with dimensions $-\frac{N}{2}-1,\frac{N}{2}$. We considered an example wher
18:58
@imbAF the number of momenta inside the 1BZ is one thing and points of the reciprocal lattice are another thing
19:28
@Mr.Feynman the nr. of momenta is equal to the nr. of lattice points within the BZ
19:56
Which doesn't contradict my sentence
given the conductivity tensor $\sigma = \sum_n \sigma^{(n)}$ where $\sigma^{(n)} = e^2\int \frac{dk}{4\pi^3}\tau_n(\varepsilon_n(k))v_n(k)v_n(k)(-\frac{\partial f}{\partial \varepsilon})_{\varepsilon = \varepsilon_n(k)}$ i am trying to show that, at $T=0$, the conductivity of a band with cubic symmetry is $\sigma = \frac{e^2}{12\pi^3\hbar}\tau(\varepsilon_F)\int dS \vert v(k) \vert$. i have the $\tau$ figured out and the constant nearly there, [...]
[...] but i keep getting $v_n(k)^2$ inside the integral, not $\vert v(k) \vert$ and for the life of me i cant figure out how to resolve this
it seems we have entered the electrodynamics & condensed matter era of the chat
i have entered the condensed matter era of my life
my condolences/congratulations (choose as appropriate)
acm, i have a q for u. next semester i am taking cmt II. i am thinking of taking qft I, but one of my profs said if im interested in quantum optics/CM experiment that i shouldnt take qft. i said id hoped it would illuminate my understanding of CMT, and they replied that it will not. what do you think about this?
20:10
Well, first of all I wouldn't ever say anyone shouldn't take a course they're interested in :P
lol ok i think he meant like its not the choice he'd advise. i might be paraphrasing wrong
How useful this is for condensed matter specifically I cannot judge because I have essentially no understanding of condensed matter except for viewing it through the biased lens of hep-th QFT
as someone not interested in hep-th i question the usefulness of qft for my research directions. but on the other hand, i kind of feel like how can i call myself a physics phd student if i havent learned qft.
but i have seen consequences before resulting from my refusal to take advice and my insistence on figuring things out myself.
i am hovering over the rabbit hole but im not sure i wanna jump in
well, is this a "I have time for one more course and it can be QFT or something else" or a "If I really stretch myself I can fit in QFT somehow" type of decision :P
i think its "I have time for one more course and it can be QFT or something else"
20:24
so what are the "something else" alternatives you're considering?
@Mr.Feynman I want to be so famous and recognizable one day that people will use my name like that (I guess having a less generic username would help me a lot). I guess if someone say a very, very bad and recycled joke, one could say "oh god, that sounds user430580ish" :P
i refuse to be condensed matter
@ACuriousMind well i know what electives i want to take in total, and i have time to take them all so its more like "do i want to add qft to the list or devote that time to research" bc the amt of electives im taking meets the minimum requirement eitherway
I will forever remain a diffuse substance
@Slereah cause now you have non stationary endpoints on the action
20:29
@Relativisticcucumber then I'd say you can spend the rest of your life doing research but probably not taking courses and later you'd have to learn from a book without a course, so take the course
(I feel compelled to add a "this is not career advice" to this in the same vein as people clearly giving financial advice say "this is not financial advice" to avoid liability)
@ACuriousMind you are clearly speaking as a quantum finance expert now
@user430580 one day you'll be famous like me, young user
@ACuriousMind that is a v good point
@ACuriousMind this reminds me of why I decided to take a superconductivity course and the professor seemed to be happy because that year there were only theoreticians, so she could make a more "theoretical" course
Then some claims gave me reasons to be believe she thought that varying the action and using EL were two different methods to derive the EoM, so I dropped the course
And when I say "dropped" I mean the lectures. I still have to study that stuff but I hope it will come natural after learning a fair deal of condensed matter at this point
God, why does all my academic self-lore always end like that?
20:48
BTW could somebody please help me familiarize with this chat room's lore? What does it mean if someone says "MIAO MIAO this~~" "MIAO MIAO that~~"?
LOL
i think nI uses miao miao to mean "me"
But why, is there an interesting background lore, a legend maybe?
@Mr.Feynman what do you mean "there were only theoreticians"?
@user430580 i dont think so -- mean maybe they have a personal reason
ok thanks
20:50
but iirc they just were like that even prior to joining SE lol
@ACuriousMind that during that year the students taking that class all were in a theoretical curriculum, unlike the previous years
I find it a bit strange that the prof would even have that information :P
and even then this is strange - I would expect the "theory level" is a fixed property of the course
@ACuriousMind she asked. Oh, right. Context. If you have a dozen students you can ask :P
@ACuriousMind I think it was more about making some hints at more advanced stuff. The result was one of the most phenomenological courses I've ever seen
Which isn't bad per se, but that course was :P
@Relativisticcucumber did you realize NOW?!
21:22
@user430580 nI is a cat, as they have mentioned many times
I have a feeling that if further questions are in order they should be addressed directly to him :p
@Slereah I am dense and doesn't matter
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